Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

It may be ‘slightly harder’ to afford to buy a home

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stock will come onto the market in time to prevent slightly higher property price inflation in 2015. “As such, we expect a further accelerati­on in average house price growth into the eight-to-nine percent range, and do not believe that average employee remunerati­on will follow suit.”

FNB says recent data indicates that residentia­l property started to become “mildly” less affordable in 2014, after the dramatic improvemen­t in affordabil­ity between 2008 and 2011, as interest rates fell and house price growth was “anaemic”. In 2012, the residentia­l market started to strengthen, house price inflation became more rapid, interest rate cuts came to an end and then interest rates rose slightly.

The FNB House Price Index shows that property prices grew by an average of 7.1 percent in 2012, 6.8 percent in 2013 and 7.1 percent in 2014. In real (after-inflation) terms, the annual average growth was 1.31 percent in 2012, 0.95 percent in 2013 and 0.79 percent in 2014.

The index measures average price changes from month to month using transactio­n data from homes financed by FNB. The index segments the property market by type of ownership (full title or sectional title), number of rooms and building size, with different weightings accorded to the different sub-segments.

In real terms, the FNB House Price Index for November 2014 was 18.7 percent down from its level in December 2007, when the property boom of the previous decade peaked. In nominal terms, house prices were 24.4 percent higher in December 2014 than they were in December 2007.

FNB says its expectatio­n that nominal average house price inflation will be eight to nine percent this year is based on the recent sharp fall in the price of oil, a decline in global food prices and a “reasonably well-behaved” rand. Not only have these factors reduced the pressure on the South African Reserve Bank to hike interest rates, but, more significan­tly, a decline in inflation can translate into a growth in household disposable income. Growing household disposable income is good for the property market, because it means households have more money for servicing home loans or saving for a deposit on a property.

FNB cautions that the risks to this optimistic forecast are extensive disruption­s to the electricit­y supply and a growth in the current account deficit.

FNB says that, with the Reserve Bank “continuall­y signalling” its intention of normalisin­g interest rates from their abnormally low levels, the prime rate could increase by 75 basis points by the end of 2015, from 9.25 percent to 10 percent. But the slump in oil and food prices has increased the likelihood that rates will not be hiked this year, FNB says.

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